Republicans forge tax deal, final votes seen next week
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[December 14, 2017]
By David Morgan and Amanda Becker
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Congressional
Republicans reached a deal on final tax legislation on Wednesday,
clearing the way for final votes next week on a package that would slash
the U.S. corporate tax rate to 21 percent and cut taxes for wealthy
Americans.
Under an agreement between the House of Representatives and the Senate,
the corporate tax would be 1 percentage point higher than the 20 percent
rate earlier proposed, but still far below the current headline rate of
35 percent, a deep tax reduction that corporations have sought for
years.
As they finalized the biggest tax overhaul in 30 years, Republicans
wavered for weeks on whether to slash the top income tax rate for the
wealthy. In the end, they agreed to cut it to 37 percent from the
current 39.6 percent.
That was despite criticism from Democrats that the Republican plan tilts
toward the rich and corporations, offering little to the middle class.
"I think we've got a pretty good deal," Senate Finance Committee
Chairman Orrin Hatch told reporters.
The emerging agreement would repeal the corporate alternative minimum
tax, set up to ensure profitable companies pay some federal tax, and
expand a proposed $10,000 cap for state and local property tax
deductions to include income tax, lawmakers and sources familiar with
the negotiations said.
It was also expected to limit the popular mortgage interest deduction to
home loans of no more than $750,000 and provide the owners of
pass-through businesses, such as sole proprietorships and partnerships,
with a 20 percent business income deduction.
The deal would gut part of the Obamacare health law by repealing a
federal fine on individuals who fail to obtain health insurance, while
authorizing oil drilling in Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.
Both add-on measures were part of nailing down sufficient votes for
passage.
Moving the corporate tax target rate to 21 percent from 20 percent gave
tax writers enough revenue to make the tax cuts immediate, Republican
Senator Ron Johnson told reporters.
News of the deal began circulating just before a formal House-Senate
conference committee began debating it in public, leading Democrats to
decry the gathering as a sham.
A final bill could be formally unveiled on Friday, with decisive votes
expected next week in both chambers.
UNDECIDEDS
Despite expressions of confidence about passage from party leaders, the
path to a final vote in the Senate could still be perilous. Republicans,
who hold a 52-48 majority in the 100-seat Senate, can lose no more than
two votes on the tax bill.
Republican Senator John McCain, who has brain cancer, was in a military
hospital to undergo treatment for the side effects of cancer therapy.
At least three other Senate Republicans still seemed to be undecided,
including Arizona's Jeff Flake, who was not specific about his
hesitation in brief hallway remarks to reporters.
Bob Corker, a fiscal hawk, said he was undecided on whether to support
the bill. He told reporters: "My deficit concerns have not been
alleviated."
Susan Collins, who helped sink her fellow Republicans' efforts to
dismantle former Democratic President Barack Obama's healthcare law
earlier this year, said she would not make a final decision on which way
to vote "until I see the bill."
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President Trump delivers a speech on tax reform legislation at the
White House. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
In a White House speech, Trump said the Internal Revenue Service had advised
that if he signs the bill into law before Christmas, the tax cuts would take
effect in February.
The IRS had no immediate comment. But a Trump administration official said the
IRS would have to readjust its paycheck tax withholding tables for employers and
that new withholding levels would take effect in February.
Under the bill, tax returns being filed next year for 2017 would not be
affected, but returns filed in 2019 for 2018 would.
Trump appeared in the White House with several middle-class families he said
would benefit from the tax bill.
The Joint Committee on Taxation and the Congressional Budget Office, both
nonpartisan research units of Congress, have forecast that wealthy taxpayers and
businesses would gain disproportionately from the debt-financed Republican
proposals.
DEBT EXPANDS
As drafted, the Republican plan was expected to add as much as $1.5 trillion to
the $20 trillion national debt in 10 years. With that in view, Republicans have
been urgently trying to finalize details of their package without increasing its
estimated impact on the federal deficit and the debt.
At a tax event held by Democrats, Moody's Analytics Chief Economist Mark Zandi
said the Republican bill, if enacted, would cause interest rates to rise,
meaning the benefits of a lower corporate tax rate would be “completely washed
out.”
Stock markets have rallied for months in anticipation of lower taxes for
businesses. The benchmark Dow Jones Industrial Average Index <.DJI> closed up
0.33 percent at 24,585.43.
With their defeat on Tuesday in an Alabama special U.S. Senate election,
Republicans were under pressure to complete their tax overhaul before Christmas
and before a new Democratic senator can be formally seated in the Senate.
Democrat Doug Jones' victory in Alabama came hours ahead of the final tax deal.
When Jones arrives in Washington, the Republicans' already slim Senate majority
will narrow to 51-49. Fast action by Republicans on taxes would prevent Jones
from upsetting expected vote tallies since he will not likely be seated until
late December or early January.
Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer called on Republicans to delay a vote on
overhauling the tax code for the first time in 30 years until Jones can be
seated. But that was unlikely.
"Who would've thought they could have made the bill even less favorable to the
middle class and more slanted towards the wealthy?" Schumer told a news
conference.
(Additional reporting by Jeff Mason, Steve Holland, Susan Cornwell, Richard
Cowan, Makini Brice and Doina Chiacu; Editing by James Dalgleish and Peter
Cooney)
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